Issue 21, 2010

Imaging the drying of a colloidal suspension

Abstract

We present an experimental investigation of the drying kinetics seen from inside a sessile droplet laden with a colloidal sol of silica nanoparticles. We use fast, two-color confocal microscopy imaging to quantitatively extract on the one hand the concentration field of the rhodamine-tagged nanosol and on the other hand the velocity field and the mobility field of large, fluorescein-tagged tracers. By changing the initial concentration at which the drop dries up, we propose a method that yields a self-consistent way to obtain the rheology of the sol. Based on these results, we analyse the drying kinetics in terms (i) of flow patterns that include evaporating and Marangoni flows which compete to determine the final concentration profile and (ii) of truncated dynamics that we quantitatively relate to the rheology of the sol.

Graphical abstract: Imaging the drying of a colloidal suspension

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 May 2010
Accepted
19 Jul 2010
First published
17 Sep 2010

Soft Matter, 2010,6, 5451-5460

Imaging the drying of a colloidal suspension

H. Bodiguel and J. Leng, Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 5451 DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00323A

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